St. Louis Metro Transit Board advances long-range plan

Helping more people get
to work and stimulating job growth and economic development are the goals of a
30-year long-range plan unanimously approved Feb. 12 by the St. Louis Metro Transit
Board of Commissioners. Called "Moving Transit Forward," the plan for the
future of transit in the region presents the results of nearly a year of
in-depth study by Metro officials and staff from the East-West Gateway Council
of Governments (EWGCG), the region's planning agency.

The groups worked
together to get widespread community input and then marry the transit
preferences from the citizens across the region with residential and employment
patterns to design the most effective public-transit options.

The long-range
transit plan now goes to the EWGCG Board for its consideration on February 24.
If adopted, the plan will be used as a blueprint to help move the St. Louis
region forward by improving transit access to jobs, helping the region attract more
businesses and tourism dollars and positioning the St. Louis region to receive
more federal funding to improve transit service and transit infrastructure.

"This is a comprehensive
plan that combines the science of transit planning with community preferences,
the demographics of where people live and work, and a study of how the region
is evolving," said Robert J. Baer, President and CEO of Metro. "Moving forward
to implement many of the elements in this plan will make the St. Louis region a
better place for people to live and work."

Baer noted that the plan
represents a comprehensive and cooperative effort by Metro and EWGCG to develop
a single document that presents a strategic and realistic plan for the future
of public transit across the region. The options outlined in the long-range
plan will improve customers' transit experience and expand services to more
communities. Key elements include restoring services that were cut last year;
expanding bus and light rail; and adding passenger amenities, such as transit
centers and new technologies that will make transit easier for the public to
use.

"In working with the
community, we heard loud and clear that citizens wanted a financially
responsible plan that addresses the region's transit needs and includes a
variety of service options," said Ray Friem, Metro's chief operating officer of
transit services. "This plan does that."

To satisfy the community's
request for a financially responsible plan, Metro officials have divided it
into three phases. The projects that could be pursued in each phase are:

Short-Range (1-5 years) •
Restoring services cut last year to increase coverage and frequency back to
levels before the reductions • Planning and design for the next MetroLink
extension that would be determined by EWGCG • Two Bus Rapid Transit routes. BRT
offers higher speed, high capacity service (also to be determined by EWGCG) •
Improved passenger amenities and technology

Long-Range (10-30 years) •
Planning, construction and operation of a second light-rail alignment • Begin
planning and engineering for a third light-rail extension.

At the Board meeting Feb.12,
Metro officials said the projects in the plan have a strong chance of attracting
federal funding as long as the region provides the required local match. They
emphasized that any infrastructure expansion would require federal funding, as
well as an increase in state and local funding to provide the local-matching
funds. Metro officials also said no expansion would be possible without
sufficient funding from local, state, and federal sources for both capital and
operating purposes.

The efforts described in
the "Moving Transit Forward" plan not only would benefit riders, but also people
who never use public transit because it: • Reduces traffic congestion and
pollution • Helps lower the cost of living by reducing or eliminating car
payments, insurance and fuel costs • Helps grow the economy and stimulate
business development. To date, the region has seen $2 billion in development
around MetroLink stations. • Helps attract conventions and tourists by
providing a public transit system, one of the first requirements by out-of-town
visitors, and every $1 spent on transit returns $4 in investment to the St.
Louis region.

Metro cannot proceed on any
of the projects outlined in its long-range plan until EWGCG officials approve
it. A timeline for reviewing the projects will be determined by the EWGCG.